Chemistry and Kinematics of the Late-Forming Dwarf Irregular Galaxies Leo A, Aquarius, and Sagittarius DIG
Evan N. Kirby (1), Luca Rizzi (2), Enrico V. Held (3), Judith G. Cohen, (1), Andrew A. Cole (4), Ellen M. Manning (4), Evan D. Skillman (5), Daniel, R. Weisz (6) ((1) Caltech, (2) W.M. Keck Observatory, (3) INAF, (4), University of Tasmania, (5) University of Minnesota

TL;DR
This study uses Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy to analyze the stellar kinematics and chemical properties of three late-forming dwarf irregular galaxies, revealing dark matter dominance and complex chemical evolution patterns.
Contribution
It provides new detailed kinematic and chemical data for Leo A, Aquarius, and SagDIG, highlighting their delayed star formation histories and challenging simple chemical evolution models.
Findings
All three galaxies are dark matter-dominated.
Stars show no evidence of velocity structure.
Metallicity distributions suggest external gas acquisition.
Abstract
We present Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy of individual stars in the relatively isolated Local Group dwarf galaxies Leo A, Aquarius, and the Sagittarius dwarf irregular galaxy. The three galaxies--but especially Leo A and Aquarius--share in common delayed star formation histories relative to many other isolated dwarf galaxies. The stars in all three galaxies are supported by dispersion. We found no evidence of stellar velocity structure, even for Aquarius, which has rotating HI gas. The velocity dispersions indicate that all three galaxies are dark matter-dominated, with dark-to-baryonic mass ratios ranging from (SagDIG) to (Aquarius). Leo A and SagDIG have lower stellar metallicities than Aquarius, and they also have higher gas fractions, both of which would be expected if Aquarius were farther along in its chemical evolution. The metallicity…
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